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Mid Wales Voyage Tips and guide

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    Mid Wales (Welsh: Canolbarth Cymru) is in the United Kingdom.

    Counties

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    Map of Mid Wales
      Ceredigion
    Cardigan Bay, and the Cambrian Mountains.
      Powys
    A mountainous area with scattered small towns. Consists of the historic counties of Brecknockshire, Montgomeryshire and Radnorshire

    Towns

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    Map
    Map of Mid Wales
    • 1 Aberystwyth – old seaside resort with promenade, university town and home to the National Library of Wales
    • 2 Cardigan (Welsh: Aberteifi) – a coastal town that is home to Cardigan Castle, which was the site of the first competitive Eisteddfod in 1176
    • 3 Lampeter (Welsh: Llanbedr Pont Steffan or Llambed) — the smallest university town in the United Kingdom
    • 4 Brecon (Welsh: Aberhonddu) — a typical small Welsh town within the Brecon Beacons National Park, surrounded by stunning scenery
    • 5 Builth Wells (Welsh: Llanfair ym Muallt) — a market town lying at the confluence of rivers Wye and Irfon, in the upper part of the Wye Valley
    • 6 Hay-on-Wye (Welsh: Y Gelli Gandryl) — a "town of books", with at least 41 bookshops, best known as the location of a prestigious annual Hay Festival
    • 7 Llanidloes — a charming small town with a number of interesting independent shops
    • 8 Llanwrtyd Wells — claims to be the smallest community in the UK with the status of a town
    • 9 Machynlleth — home of an internationally known centre for the development of alternative technology

    Other destinations

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    • 1 Brecon Beacons National Park (Welsh: Bannau Brycheiniog) — has some of the most spectacular and distinctive upland formations in southern Britain, including the Black Mountains, and a vast array of moorland, forests, valleys, waterfalls, lakes, caves and gorges.

    Understand

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    Mid Wales is the sparsely-populated heart of Wales, covering more than a third of the total area of the country but containing only around 1/15 of its population, with the university town of Aberystwyth being one of only few settlements of any significant size. It stretches from the fringes of Snowdonia in the north to the edge of industrial South Wales, and from the English border to the Irish Sea.

    Much of the region consists of the remote upland area of the Cambrian Mountains. They are not high by UK or international standards - the highest point is Pumlumon Fawr, at 752 metres or 2,467 feet. But they are wild and remote, with only a few small villages and isolated farms, and crossed by only a handful of roads; the land is largely useful only for sheep-farming and forestry. Several of the valleys were also flooded in the 1950s and 1960s to create reservoirs mainly serving England, which proved controversial at the time. The mountains also act as a barrier between the more English-speaking county of Powys in the east and the predominantly Welsh-speaking county of Ceredigion to the West. The areas towards the English border are lower-lying, more fertile and more heavily populated, particularly in the valleys of the rivers Severn, Wye and Usk, all of which rise in the mountains. While the scenery of mid Wales may not match the rugged grandeur of Snowdonia, it has an appeal of its own: softer and greener, yet much emptier and less given over to tourism.

    Visitor information

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    Talk

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    As elsewhere in Wales, English is universally understood. Welsh is, though, widely spoken in western Powys and in Ceredigion, and predominates in many parts of the latter. Visitors will not be expected to speak Welsh, but respect for the language and at least an attempt to pronounce place-names and so on correctly goes a long way with Welsh-speakers.

    Get in

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    By car

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    The main routes into mid Wales are the A470 (from north and south Wales), the A483 (from Swansea and Wrexham), and the A40, A44 and A458 (from across the border in England). All are single-carriageway roads: one demonstration of the remoteness of mid Wales is that there are no motorways or dual carriageways in the area at all apart from a short bypass around Brecon.

    By train

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    Arriva Trains Wales operates the Cambrian Line from Shrewsbury (with some services starting from Birmingham) to Aberystwyth, via the Severn Valley towns of Welshpool, Newtown and Caersws. Arriva Trains also run the famous Heart of Wales Line from Swansea to Shrewsbury. This service takes almost 4 hours to make the 120-mile journey through mid Wales due to the many gradients and turns. It is popular with tourists but also provides an essential service to rural communities along the route.

    By plane

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    There are no airports or air services in mid Wales. The nearest airports are at Cardiff and Birmingham.

    Get around

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    See

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    Do

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    Work on organic farms: Wales is home to many communes and organic farms, and WWOOF can arrange for volunteers to work for free at some of these place in exchange for room and board. It is an excellent way to experience life in the Welsh countryside, make friends and, at the same time, learn a little about organic farming.

    • 1 Glyndŵr's Way. 135-mile (217-km) path in an extended loop through Powys between Knighton and Welshpool. Glyndŵr's Way (Q502969) on Wikidata Glyndŵr's Way on Wikipedia

    Go next

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    This region travel guide to Mid Wales is a usable article. It gives a good overview of the region, its sights, and how to get in, as well as links to the main destinations, whose articles are similarly well developed. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.



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